I know, fall is coming and everyone’s excited about pumpkin spice lattes. But, it’s still blazing hot outside and I’ve been working on my cold brew coffee game all summer. I’ve become a self-proclaimed cold brew aficionado, so hear me out!
Homemade cold brew coffee is:
- Smooth, slightly sweet and super refreshing
- Easy to make
- More affordable than buying at a coffee shop
- Ready-made for busy mornings
- Easily heated up if you’re in the mood for hot coffee
You can make cold brew on the weekend, then pour your coffee from the fridge every morning. No boiling water. No fussing with a coffee maker.
As someone who is 100% not a morning person, cold brew coffee is a total game changer.
Let’s make some cold brew!
Fun Facts about Cold Brew Coffee
Cold brew can be strong.
This depends on a lot of factors, including the beans used, steeping time, and dilution. The dilution is the factor that is the easiest to control. Don’t drink cold brew concentrate straight—it’s highly caffeinated!
Cold brew is less acidic.
If regular drip coffee or espresso upsets your stomach, cold brew might not. The only way to know is to try it, and you’ll have more control over the end result if you make it yourself.
You can heat up cold brew and drink it hot.
Indeed, it’s true, and it’s very good. The flavor stays about the same.
Cold brew takes longer to make than drip coffee.
Since the water is cold, it needs to steep for about 12 to 18 hours to soak up the coffee’s color, flavor and caffeine. The cold extraction process brings out fewer of coffee’s bitter compounds, which produces a sweeter and smoother result.
Coarsely-ground coffee makes the best cold brew.
No coffee grinder at home? No problem. Just grind your coffee at the grocery store using their big coffee grinder machine, with the dial set on the coarse/French press option. I’ve provided approximate amounts of ground coffee to use if you don’t have a scale for a more accurate weight measurement (don’t worry about it).
Use any coffee variety you enjoy to make cold brew.
Any variety will work, and you’ll find that it tases less bitter when its steeped in cold water instead of hot. It would be fun to compare a glass of cold brew coffee with hot coffee of the same variety.
Basic Cold Brew Coffee Ratio
Here’s the deal: This ratio is flexible. A kitchen scale will come in handy if you have one, but it’s not necessary. You’re making cold brew concentrate, and you can dilute the concentrate to taste once it’s finished.
- Per 1 cup of water, you’ll need 1 ounce (by weight) coarsely ground coffee. That’s about 1/4 cup whole coffee beans, which yields roughly 1/2 cup ground coffee. If you’re accustomed to the metric system, 1 ounce is equal to 28 grams.
- You’re going to end up with a little less concentrate than the amount of water you used, since some of it will be absorbed by the coffee grounds. However, you’re going to dilute it with an equal amount of water, so you will be doubling your final yield. Clear as mud? I mean, coffee? Good.
Examples
- Let’s make cold brew coffee in a common 1-quart wide-mouth mason jar (affiliate link). In the jar, you’ll combine 3 ounces coarsely-ground coffee (that’s about 3/4 cup whole coffee beans turned into 1 1/2 cups coarsely-ground coffee) with 3 cups of water.
- After steeping and straining the mixture, you’ll have about 2 1/2 cups of cold brew concentrate, which is enough for 5 cups of cold brew. You’ve just made enough coffee to last you from Monday through Friday!
- If you have a 2-quart jar, simply double the amounts offered above.
- If you have an extra-large French press like I do, you can use 5 ounces of coffee (about 1 1/4 cups whole coffee beans turned into about 2 1/2 cups coarsely-ground coffee) and 5 cups water. You’ll end up with about 4 1/4 cups concentrate, or enough for 8 1/2 cups of cold brew.
Recommended Steeping Time
The steeping time is flexible as well. I’ve read suggestions for “overnight or 12 hours,” and “at least 18 or up to 24 hours,” so do what works with your schedule. Starbucks steeps their cold brew for 20 hours.
If you accidentally steep yours longer (even 24+ hours), it’s ok. Your concentrate may taste a little more bitter than it would have, but it’s probably fine. It may also be extra-strong, so you might want to dilute with some extra water.
How to Strain Your Cold Brew
Once you’re done steeping the coffee, you’ll need to strain the coffee grounds out of the water. A fine-mesh sieve or French press filter isn’t sufficient (you’ll end up with murky, sludgy concentrate). Most methods will suggest using cheese cloth, but I hate cheese cloth! It’s difficult to work with and seems so wasteful.
I played around with other options and found two that work great. See my photos for examples of each. Choose one:
- Thin paper coffee filters: Use the “basket” paper filters that splay out in a round seashell shape like you see here. Make sure your filter is made of very thin paper, not a thicker material that will take forever to filter through. These are the filters I used.
- A vintage handkerchief: Yes, really—any small, thin, clean, lint-free, cotton cloth like a cocktail napkin will do. It should be large enough to cover your sieve when draped across it. I found my handkerchief at the bottom of my photo props, and I love that it’s easy to wash and reusable (although you could end up with a light coffee stain, so don’t use your favorite white one).
To strain, simply place the coffee filter into a small fine-mesh sieve, or drape your cloth over the sieve. Place it over a pitcher or liquid measuring cup, and pour the concentrate through it. That’s it!
Have I convinced you to try making cold brew coffee at home? It’s so much cheaper than buying it from the coffee shop! Please let me know how it turns out for you in the comments.
Want to change it up? Try making cold brew iced tea. Like cold brew coffee, it’s more smooth and less bitter.
Looking for more recipes to ease your morning routine? Here are 23 make-ahead breakfasts.
Watch How to Make Cold Brew Coffee
Cold Brew Coffee
- Author:
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Total Time: 20 minutes (plus 12 hour resting time)
- Yield: 5 cups coffee 1x
- Category: Drink
- Method: Cold brew
- Cuisine: American
Let’s make cold brew coffee! It’s easy to make, and it’s so nice to have coffee ready to go. This recipe is written for a 1-quart wide-mouth mason jar; you can scale it up or down using 1 ounce* (28 grams) coffee per 1 cup water. The quantities provided will produce about 2 ½ cups concentrate, which is enough for 5 cups of cold brew.
Ingredients
- 3 ounces (85 grams) coarsely-ground coffee (that’s about ¾ cup whole coffee beans turned into about 1 ½ cups* coarsely-ground coffee)
- 3 cups water (filtered water if you have it)
Instructions
- In a 1-quart wide-mouth mason jar, combine the coffee and water. Stir to combine. I like to let my mixture rest for about 5 minutes and stir it again; the coffee grounds seem to gain more water exposure this way.
- Put a lid on your container and refrigerate it for 12 to 18 hours.
- When you’re ready to strain your cold brew, place a thin paper coffee filter or a small, thin cotton napkin, cloth or handkerchief over a small fine-mesh sieve. Pour the concentrate through the prepared sieve into a liquid measuring cup or pitcher. Let it rest for a few minutes to let the last of the cold brew trickle down.
- To serve, fill a glass with ice and fill it halfway with water. Then fill the rest of the glass with cold brew concentrate, and stir to combine. Cold brew concentrate will keep well in the refrigerator for up to 2 weeks, although I find that it has the best flavor within the first week.
Notes
*Measurement note: These are ounces by weight, not by volume. This is always the case with non-liquid measurements. “1 ½ cups coarsely-ground coffee” is the least exact measurement I can offer (the volume of the ground coffee depends on the exact coarseness of your grind)—but it will work. Just adjust the concentrate-to-water ratio to suit your liking as your pour your glass of cold brew and you’re all good.
Miemie
I’ve been making my cold brew in a mason jar for a while ( learned from another site) and the cold brew I ended up with is so concentrated and bitter, I can barely finish a 12 oz cup. Now I realize the problem is that I didn’t dilute it enough to enjoy the subtle sweetness and smooth of a home-made cold brew. Thank you for the very detailed post! Home-made cold-brew is way cheaper than ordering it in cafe.
★★★★★
Kate
Miemie, thanks so much for commenting! Yes, it can be bitter and too strong if done other ways. So, I’m glad this was helpful for you! Enjoy your morning cold brew. :)
Jeannie
I can’t wait to try this!
Kate
Be sure to report back!
Tracey Miller
Thanks for this recipe! I’ve heard a lot about cold brew but didn’t know how it was done. This is very thorough and helpful! I look forward to trying it soon!
:) Tracey
Kate
You’re welcome, Tracey! Be sure to report back on what you think.
Tracey Miller
Will do, Kate :)
Katie
I have always wanted to try cold brew at home and this recipe was so helpful and so straightforward!! Honestly, I didn’t realize how much better it would taste! I drink coffee every single day (and have for years) — usually, I would just add ice to my regularly brewed coffee. Never again! I love making this cold brew and am so grateful you took the time to explain it step by step!
★★★★★
Gaby Dalkin
It’s always cold brew season on the West coast ;)
Kate
That it is! :)
Lynn
I’m going to have to try it-just because your photos make it look so darn good!!!!
Kate
It takes just as good, too! Love to hear what you think, Lynn!
Stefan Winczencz
Hi!
Sorry – you could not possibly have guessed – but I am allergic to coffee! One cup and I have the whole programme – nausea, vertigo, my muscles do not move the way I want them to!
I love the smell of freshly ground coffee, but – fortunately – as soon as the powder hits hot water – issa noo good for me!
Nevertheless, carry on!
Kate
I’m sorry to hear that! Hopefully you can do tea? Try my cold brew tea if you can! https://cookieandkate.com/2015/cold-brew-iced-tea/
Mandy
My mom and granny turned me on to cold brew in the early 2000’s (they were so ahead of their game), it tastes soooo much better! I just recently started making it again so that I can have quick coffee before my 5:30am workout Monday – Friday. I use the Toddy system because that’s what my mom used and it’s easy to make a large batch (we drink a lot of coffee). Toddy makes filter bags that would probably work well with a large Mason jar, too, and they’re fairly inexpensive. I purchased them on Amazon.
★★★★★
Kate
I would say they were ahead of the game! That’s awesome. Thanks for sharing, Mandy! I appreciate your review.
Chef William
I have been making my own cold brew for a couple of months but mostly by guess work. Thanks for all the helpful tips, they will improve my finished product a great deal I am sure. I do like to start my day with a 12oz cup of keto coffee at about 4:30a.m. but then I want a couple of cups of ice coffee during the day. Cold brew answers that need nicely.
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad the tips were helpful for you! I really appreciate the review, Chef William.
Peppermint Dolly
The photography here is stunning!!
Rebecca
Kate
Thank you! It was fun to do.
Samantha
Thanks for the instructions! I’ve read about this method before and I always wonder why I couldn’t just cold brew a non-concentrated batch in my French press overnight and pour it out into a glass for drinking after 12 hours? Why would I need a strainer for cold brew but not for hot French -pressed coffee, since it’s using the same size grounds? Do you have any insight into that? Thanks!
Amy
Yes. You can do that.
Kate
Hey Samantha, good questions! I think you could definitely make a non-concentrated batch in your French press. I appreciate the convenience of making a concentrated batch once and doling it out over the week. Re: straining, this really up to personal preference. I’m a French press drinker and I’m not bother by the sediment in my hot French press coffee. However, I am bothered by the sediment in my cold-brew coffee made and filtered by the same press—I suspect something about soaking the grounds loosens up more little particles that slip through, or something like that? Anyway, try it and find out! You can always filter your filtered French press cold brew again.
Norbert Pruelilly
I think you may have your whole bean to ground coffee amounts backwards. I’m struggling to see how grinding coffee would double the volume given that there would be less air between the coffee grounds than there is between the beans.
Kate
Hi Norbert, I know it may seem counter intuitive, but the amounts are correct. Try it and you will see! :)
Gordo
Grinding coffee in a coffee grinder barely changes the volume at all from whole beans to coursly-ground, remains at about 3/4 cup. This part was confusing and had me checking other recipes for clarification, still don’t understand.
Héctor Villarreal
I have this doubt too, I don’t get how coursly-ground coffee beans gives you more volume the the whole coffee bean. Please explain
Matthew
I ground 3/4 cup (coarse) and got… 3/4 cup.
George
Norbert is correct…the volume is less after grinding, actually, mine stayed at almost the same level in my grinder. Maybe you have some kind of magic grinder that increases the amount after grinding ? :-)
George
But seriously why not just go by weight? Much simpler
Gina
I just visited Trader Joe’s and ground up coarsely 14oz of beans and it fit right back into the same container. The volume from bean to ground stated the same.
Alexa Martin
I’ve been meaning to make my first batch of homemade cold brew for the past two weeks and have been putting it off. Thank you for the lovely, detailed post! I will definitely reference when I get around to making it :)
Kate
You’re welcome! Let me know what you think when you make it.
Brittany Audra @ Audra's Appetite
I love making homemade cold brew; it’s in my weekly meal-prep routine! :)
Kate
It helps save so much time, doesn’t it! Thank you, Brittany!
SherryinChicago
We do cold brew all summer, I have a 2 quart pitcher I “brew” it in then strain into recycled sangria glass bottles w/a flip lid. I use my coffee maker gold filter nestled in a strainer to filter into the glass bottle. I like it fairly strong so use the concentrate in a glass of ice w/a splash of almond milk & pump of Torino syrup. As the ice melts it does get slightly diluted, but still a nice full flavored coffee.
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing your cold brew variation! I appreciate it review, Sherry. :)
Craig
I love cold brew but every recipe always seems to use a really high amount of coffee to the amount of water (maybe this is why it costs a lot in the shops) is it not possible to use less coffee so then it wouldn’t need diluting?
Kate
Hi Craig, you could use less ground coffee, and then you wouldn’t need to dilute your concentrate, but you’re making less finished coffee that way. Does that make sense?
Kath
Hi Kate! Are you cup measurements metric cups – for those of us in Aus / NZ? We’re heading into summer and I’m going to need this recipe!
Kate
Hi Kath! These are US cups. Hope that helps! If you try it, be sure to report back!
Laura Teague
Oh My Goodness!!! I just made this cold brew coffee and it was amazing!! I didn’t really know what to expect (I’m not really a big fan of cold coffee and had never tried to make it before) – I followed the directions exactly and it was really wonderful. Enjoying a big icy glass right now!! :)
★★★★★
Kate
I’m really happy to hear that, Laura! Thanks for sharing your experience.
Melisa Creemer
We make this all the time in large quantity. We like the “Coffee Sock” or filtering. :) Love your website and recipes!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Melisa!
Louisa
I LOVE cold brew coffee. I pour my coffee into a drawstring bag made from linen and then pour the water over that. It works rather like a tea bag and eliminates the need to strain the coffee. I just empty the coffee grounds into the compost and toss the bag into the wash. Go team cold brew!
★★★★★
Kate
Team cold brew! Thanks for sharing, Louisa!
Mary Wells
What size is the linen bag?
Louisa
Hi Mary, my bags are about the size of a piece of printer paper. I have also been using a bag made from unbleached muslin. Both work well. If you were to make one I think you’d be happy as long as it was larger than the bag of coffee you want to use but not so large to be overwhelming.
Jenna
Not sure what happened, but I followed the recipe/time/quantities exactly, and ended up with a massive pile of wet coffee grounds, and about 1/4 cup of strained liquid coffee. Any ideas?
Kate
Hi Jenna, I’m bummed to hear that! What was your filtering setup? Someone else reported that it took a long time to strain the mixture, and I’m wondering if that’s because your paper filter was thick. Mine was quite thin (paper-thin, you could say) and worked great.
Cassie Autumn Tran
I have slowly but surely been integrating coffee into my diet. There’s no sense of consistency to how often I make coffee, but I always add Stevia and almond milk into a cup! It’s a serious game-changer! As for cold brew versus hot, I have no preference. Depends on my mood and the weather, really!
Lee Ann C
Thank you for this post, your instructions were clear and explanations helpful. The cold brew coffee turned out great and I’m already on my second batch.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re so welcome, Lee! Thanks for letting me know your experience and providing a review.
CL King
This is perfect for many coffee drinkers like me who may have stomach issues, especially if they have a hard time digesting a regular cup of Joe with high acid value.
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, CL!
Laura
My cold brew turned out delicious! I had trouble straining it though. I placed a coffee filter in my fine meshed strainer and it was dripping SO SLOWLY! I was running late so I just strained it a few times through the strainer without the coffee filter which worked pretty well. However I got a bunch of jars dirty by straining it so many times. Do I need a different kind of filter?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Laura, I’m sorry to hear that!! I didn’t have that issue with the coffee filters I have (thin paper filters by If You Care brand). I think that’s the easiest solution here.
Samira Tahtawi
The best cold brew coffee recipe to date. I am so grateful for you!
I hand milled the beans and followed your ratio, brewed for 24, strained and enjoyed. I shall never steer away from this method. Thank you so much!!
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Samira! Thanks for letting me know you love it.
Dave
Hi, I’m assuming that I could use decaffinated beans and get the same results?
Also, I just received a Primula Cold Brew Coffee Maker for Christmas. It has a fine mesh brew filter for the coffee beans. Have you ever tried something like this before?
Thank you!
Ben
I know what I’m gunna try tomorrow!
Kate
Let me know what you think!
Mike
Did you get the measurements for whole beans and coarse ground yield backwards in the recipe?
Kate
No, they are correct, believe it or not!
John
It’s impossible to take a material, grind it up, and get twice as much material in the end. If you could do this, people would be grinding up nuggets of gold all day long. Several people have mentioned this in the comments, and I really think that you should check this again. Otherwise, thanks for the tips.
Neena Olson
I’ve got my first batch steeping right now in my large French Press, in the refrigerator. Is that correct? I wasn’t sure if it was supposed to steep on the counter or in the fridge. I’m hoping this will help me ditch the Keurig machine and all those pods in the environment.
★★★★★
Kimberly
I’ve been seeing beverages in food stores that say cold brew coffee and was curious what that actually meant so I googled it the other night and stumbled on your page. After reading through, I thought, sounds interesting, let’s make it. So I got what I needed yesterday and steeped it for about 18 hours and had my first cup this afternoon. Delicious! I love iced coffee but usually make it the night before and let it sit in the fridge. This is so much better! Thanks for this recipe and the easy steps to follow!
Kate
Welcome! I’m glad you made this, Kimberly and loved it.
Joseph
Thanks Kate, great recipe, and really nice pics. can’t wait to try this :) . I really enjoy your site, You rock!
J*
Kate
Thank you, Joseph!
john
When you say steep the coffee for around 20 hours, do you mean on the counter or in the fridge? Thanks, John
Kate
Hi John! See step 2. In the refrigerator. :)
Betsy
We absolutely are in love with Cold Brew Coffee and are baffled by people who don’t! I’ve tried different filters that haven’t worked for me. Cheese cloth…ug!!! Made a mess. And I hated just throwing it away (which was least mess but wasteful!) My break through: panty hose!!! Sounds cray cray! I know! Buy the nice sexy thigh high ones at Macys (not cheap Walmart ones) with the elastic band at the thigh. Not the regular full pantry ones. TRUST ME!!! Life changing.
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Betsy!
Carrie Finney
Betsy, do you put the grounds in the hose and then in the water or do you pour the already brewed coffee into the hose to filter?
Thanks
Mark
Thanks! You saved me! I can’t drink regular coffee anymore B/C the caffeine and have to go the 50/50 route. I tried this and LOVE it! If I could and didn’t have to worry about harassment issues I’d give you a giant hug! This is wonderful!
★★★★★
Kate
Seriously laughing right now! I love that, Mark. Thanks for sharing.
Lupe
How can I do this with finely ground Turkish coffee? I’s like to use up my current supply and not waste it. Thanks!
Kate
Hi Lupe! I’m afraid that finely ground coffee will be quite difficult to strain out once you’ve mixed it with water, so cold brew is not the answer. It would make great espresso, I think!
Prachi
Hey, hi! I’m a little confused as to the coffee to water ratio for cold brew- I’ve just made a batch referring to a Jamie Oliver recipe which called for a 1:8 ratio, but that did not seem to yield a ‘concentrate’, as I thought it was supposed to, it was quite watery and easy to drink straight up or over ice. Your recipe seems to call for a 1:2 ratio of coffee to water when I calculate it as 1.5 cups of ground coffee with 3 cups of water, but in terms of weight it seems to also be a 1:8 ratio as 3 oz is roughly 85 gm and 3 cups is 700 ml. Am I doing some gross miscalculation here? Please help! xxx
Kate
Hi Prachi! I’m putting on my math hat. ;) I am not sure what went wrong with Jamie’s recipe. How long did you let the coffee beans soak? Were you measuring the coffee and water by weight or by volume?
1 ounce by weight = 28 grams.
1 cup water by weight = 8 ounces = 227 grams.
Which, yes, comes to about 1:8 ratio coffee:water by weight.
Here are my guidelines again: Per 1 cup of water, you’ll need 1 ounce coarsely ground coffee (about 1/4 cup whole coffee beans, which yields about 1/2 cup ground coffee). If you follow my recipe, I’m confident that your cold brew will turn out as a concentrate. Hope this helps!
Prachi
Hi Kate! Thank you for your reply :)
I wouldn’t say anything went wrong per se, it’s just that I could drink the cold brew straight up without diluting it. I measured them by volume I guess. I took the 1/4th cup measurement and put one part coffee and 8 parts water using the same cup. And I steeped it for approximately 18-19 hours.
I read your recipe carefully, and your comment, but I still don’t get it! You said the ratio is 1:8, but when you say ‘per 1 cup water there should be 1/2 cup ground coffee’, that becomes 1:2. How can the 2 ratios be different? And how can 1/4th cup beans yield double the volume in ground coffee? Lol, So confused!
patricia mccoy
I recently admitted to my daughter that I started drinking instant coffee. She shamed me so bad that I want to try to cold brew. It seems simple so I’m going to try it. I bought some Folgers half caffeine before I read your recipe so I’m going to try that I’m so excited that it stays good for a week because that was One reason I went to the instant I didn’t want my coffee maker sitting out I didn’t want to make coffee every day so this is going to be great I got a little French press got a dig that out I’m gonna make it now and I’m gonna try it in the morning thank you I’m so excited that it lasts the whole week. I will keep you posted on my progress I appreciate it Patty
Kate
Let me know what you think, Patricia!
patricia mccoy
This is Patty I just had my 1st cup of the cold brew wow. This has got to be hands-down the best cuppa coffee I have ever had. I did it just like you said that I went half-and-half with water and I heated it so delicious. I love it I told my daughter and she said That I am not allowed to drink instant coffee ever again LOL and believe me I don’t want to coffee so good
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for your review, Patricia!
Maggie
My question is how much water do you add to the concentrate when you go to serve it? When I get Cold Brew at Starbucks they always add water and I don’t know the best ratio for that. Thank you so much for the recipe and the detailed instructions. I have an 8 cup mason jar that I make it in, but I’ve yet to create one with the strength of Starbucks Cold Brew. I’m excited to try it!
Holiday
I’m not sure if anyone else has mentioned this, but you have your ratios reversed. 1/2 cup of whole beans once ground into smaller particles will only fill 1/4 cup, not the other way around. Of course if one has too little ground coffee then it won’t be concentrated and no need to dilute, and if one has too much ground coffee they can dilute it more, it’s just a warning to anyone on why their coffee may be too strong or weak.
Maria
How do you get 1 1/2 cups of ground coffee from 3/4 cup of whole beans? How do you end up with more than what you started with?
Dave
Hi Maria,
You dont :) it’s just a simple error as someone pointed out and hasn’t been corrected yet. Theres more air in a cup of whole beans, so when ground, the volume by sheer rules of physics will absolutely decrease. I suspect she has the volumes swapped between the two. Good catch!
Larissa
I wish I would have read the comments first. I just used almost all of my coffee making this recipe because I initially did a 1-4 ratio and after re-reading, although I didn’t really get it, I went back and added another cup of coffee (for a 1-2 ratio). I really hope hubby and I both like this and at least I know I’ll be able to dilute it more if need be lol. I don’t grind my own because it’s too much hassle but when I have in the past, I remember thinking, “man, there’s not really much, is there?” So I really didn’t understand this measurement that she keeps assuring everyone is correct haha. Even in the grocery store grinders that do a better job of aerating than a cheap home grinder, it just goes to the same spot in the bag.
Lisa Eaton
Kate, thank you SO much for this very detailed step-by-step! The only way I can drink coffee black is cold brew & was hesitant to try making it myself but this seemed so easy that I couldn’t resist. I made a batch last night & anxiously waited this morning to try it. Well, my first batch is already gone – I drank it all myself…LOL I can’t wait to make more tonight. If anybody is on the fence about making cold brew at home, this is the recipe to try! I think I might try adding clear extracts (vanilla or almond) to see how that goes. Definitely will try the iced tea recipe, too!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Lisa! I’m so glad you loved it. I’m happy it was just what you needed the next morning. :)
Jasmine
Tried this recipe over the weekend and didn’t end up with a concentrate but, rather, just plain ole cold brew. Not sure what went wrong! I let it steep in the fridge for over 12 hours. It tastes good but I feel like I went through a lot of coffee grounds for not a lot of coffee…
john doe
“about 1/4 cup whole coffee beans, which yields about 1/2 cup ground coffee”
How does this magic happen?
Kathryn Parker
Hi Kathryne:
I really enjoy your writing and your recipes. I bought your cookbook—I use it and your online recipes frequently. I just thought I’d write to tell you that you’re doing a great job.
Thank you,
Kathryn Parker
Toronto, Ontario
Kate
I hope you enjoy the cookbook, Kathryn! Thank you for your comment.
Mari
Thanks for sharing this! So easy and saves a bunch of time. I used a nut milk bag that I purchased on Amazon for straining, and it worked really well + totally reusable. Love your blog!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Mari!
Seth robichaud
I’m in morning classes in college, and this looks perfect for convienence and cost when I have to be in class at 5 in the morning! I can just grab and go. Do you think if I left the coffee undiluted, this would work as a “substitute espresso” in an iced latte? Can’t afford or fit an espresso machine in my dorm so maybe it couldn’t hurt to try?
Robin
Thank you so much! This is the best coffee ever… I never realized how much I like iced coffee…straight black. Nothing else.. this recipe is smooth and rich. Thank you for sharing.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Robin! I’m glad you loved it.
Robin
Best Coffee ever and…one more thing… I used a very clean knee high stocking to strain…I also use and WASH.. for tea. Best and cheep strainer especially for this coffee as there is a large amount…. you can empty or just throw away.. No muss no fuss.. :) .
I know sounds gross but if it’s clean then no worries.. pick the cheep ones up at the drugstores..
★★★★★
Kate
I’m so glad you loved it, Robin!
Ashley
I love this ratio! I do find cheese cloth a bit easier, but I tie up my grounds in a cheese cloth “tea bag” instead of straining it. I’ve also used a clean long sock. You can fold the edges over the main jar and screw on the lid. Thank you for the ratios! They worked perfectly!
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad you loved it, Ashley!
Jenna Loos
When I grind 3/4 cup coffee beans I only get About a cup’s worth Coffee grounds not a cup and a 1/2. Should I do only 2 cups of cold water instead of the 3?
Deborah Bondo
If you have a kitchen scale, I have found 62 grams is perfect.
Jen L.
Hi Jenna. I, too, ground 3/4 cups of whole beans and got 7/8 cups of course grinds. I am trying that amount with 3 cups of cold water to see how it is. How did your coffee turn out using the 2 cups of water?
Michele
Hi Kate, thanks for this post, it brought back sweet memories of when my parents made cold brew from a toddy back in the 70’s. That was the only coffee made in our house, they just heated up the water and it was ready on the spot every morning and then iced coffees in the afternoon. Clean delicious tasting coffee,Yum. Your directions and photos are great and have inspired me to get to it. Thanks!
Kate
You’re welcome! I hope you love it, Michele.
Michelle
WOW !!!!!!!! You are my friend for life!
Perfect absolutely perfect! Thank you !
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Michelle! Thanks for your review.
Deborah Bondo
I’ve been loving the sweeter taste of cold brew lately and bought some cold brew bags at Trader Joe’s. It’s delicious, but more than I wanted to spend. My sewing machine was out for some mending, so I took two filters, pressed them flat, sewed all but a 2 inch opening, filled with 62 grams of ground coffee, (that’s how much the Trader Joe’s one had) and sewed the last 2 inches up. I placed it in my 1quart jar, filled with filtered water and the next morning…perfection!!
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Deborah! Always nice to have something to look forward to in the morning.
Wendy
I’m pretty sure you mixed up your whole coffee beans and coarsely ground coffee ratios.
Linda
In which universe does grinding coffee beans yield twice the original volume? Not in this one. Could you please just state the volume of ground coffee needed, since clearly no one is going to be using whole beans. This glaring error calls into question the whole issue of the how much coffee to use .
★
Kate
These are ounces by weight, not by volume. This is always the case with non-liquid measurements. “1 ½ cups coarsely-ground coffee” is the least exact measurement I can offer (the volume of the ground coffee depends on the exact coarseness of your grind)—but it will work. Just adjust the concentrate-to-water ratio to suit your liking as your pour your glass of cold brew and you’re all good.
Kaytee Ryan
This recipe is spot on. Delicious!
★★★★★
Kate
Hooray! I’m glad you love it.
Terry Piper
Hi Kate, can you please explain your statement about cheesecloth being wasteful? Is that just a personal feeling about using cheesecloth or are you only using it one time and then disposing of it? Cheesecloth is easy to clean and after making multiple mason jars full of the wonderful concentrate I have found that my cheesecloth has taken on the look of the Shroud of Turin, except mine is real hahaha. The lint free cheesecloth, purchased from Amazon for a fair price and it provided much more than I need for cold brewing, is cleaned after every use a air dried. The extra cheesecloth may eventually tempt me to try my hand making fresh cheese, which may be the one time use.
Like a few of the other questioners, I wonder why you have not gone with weight versus cup size. Going by weight allows you to be precise each and every time versus cup size where some beans may be of a different shape or not always equal.
When I make my Brew I use 8 oz by weight of coarse ground coffee, 1500ml of reverse osmosis water and let sit in a 2qt Mason jar inside my refrigerator for 20 hours. Using the beans I purchase at Costco produces a chocolatey flavor with no acidic taste. When I do the cheesecloth filter I noticed that I lose about 200 to 250 ml of water which I then replace with with a 100g of pure cane sugar dissolved in 200 mL of water to make a simple syrup. Once the simple syrup has been added I then top off with the remainder of another 500 mL of RO water or what it may take to fill the Mason jar.
This allows for an 11oz container to taken to work every morning to enjoy with breakfast and cost just under $7 per week to have the best, and I like it on the strong side, coffee I have had since living in Germany during H.S and the US Army plus some left over for one weekend brunch.
★★★★
melissa
For the 2 quart preparation, I measured out 1.5 cups of coffee beans and it turned into 1 cup of coffee beans. It was still tasty though.
★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Melissa!
Janet
So I made this recipe yesterday, and I’m going to try it this morning hot. Do I still do a 50/50 ratio? I’m sure it will depend on how strong a coffee I prefer. I can’t wait to give it a try!
Kate
This is cold brew, so you really want to serve as recommended otherwise, it might be on the stronger side.
Janet
I always thought the thing about cold brew was you could drink it hot or cold. I did try it hot 1/2 strength but decided that I didn’t like it that way. It’s just like reheated coffee, which I am not nuts about. It was okay cold, but the flavor you get really depends on the flavor of the coffee you choose and the flavor of the creamer you use—plus if you use a sweetener. It was okay but not as good as my Starbucks Nitro cold brew.
★★★
Allie
Made this last week with Starbucks blond roast and it was delicious. Making another batch currently – I didn’t have a way to strain it and ended up using an old T-shirt which worked perfectly!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Allie!
Karen Marie Dietze
Do you have any favorite coffee brands or styles that you recommend using? I live in the Kansas City area as well so local shops like Black Dog Coffee and Broadway Coffee are on the table!
★★★★★
Kate
We have so many great local Kansas City options! It’s really hard to choose, but beans from both those shops would be great.
Allegra
Tried cold brew from a coffee shop for the first time this summer and instantly fell in love. It was quickly getting quite expensive (coffee shops are ridiculously expensive here in Finland :/ ), so in hopes of not blowing up my monthly budged I stumbled across your recipe. Had my first cup of homemade cold brew today and oh my was it good! <3 Thanks for the awesome recipe! :)
★★★★★
Kate
I’m glad this could be a better solution for you, Allegra!
Melissa
This recipe is perfect! I love cold brew so much more than regular iced coffee because of its bolder flavor. I never knew it was actually pretty simple to make, as long as you plan ahead. I think I’ve found my weekly recipe staple to enjoy all summer long!
★★★★★
Kate
Great to hear, Melissa! Thanks for your review.
Jeff
I just made your cold brew recipe and was thrilled discover that it’s excellent! Just as good, and maybe even better, than cold brew sold at expensive coffee shops around town. I’ll be tripling the recipe for my next batch so I have even more on hand. Thank you very much for sharing the recipe.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Jeff!
Libbie
Just tried your recipe for cold brew and it came out great! I filtered with my pour over coffee maker so it ws super easy and then used the coffee concentrate to make an iced latte with butterscotch syrup and almond milk and it was better than the cafe! Thank you :-)
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Libbie!
Caitlin
I make so many things homemade (hummus, nut butter, almond milk, etc.) but for some reason have never made cold brew, despite intending to. Just mixed up a batch and I can’t wait to enjoy it tomorrow- I’ll report back! Thanks Kate!
★★★★★
Kate
What did you think, Caitlin?
Caitlin
Aaah! I had my first glass yesterday- my only regret was drinking it so late in the day. I was wired haha! It was SO tasty!!
★★★★★
Leah
Love cold brewed coffee and especially love it over coffee ice cubes! I just make up a couple trays of cubes so my iced coffee never gets diluted. Also, I use a fine mesh filter basket from an old coffee maker to strain my brew. It fits nicely over my pitcher.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Leah!
alli365
i plan on trying your recipe, only using 1/2 as much measurements & will use my 1 cup coffee maker’s removable strainer basket which is what I do for hot coffee; it fits nicely over many different cups & makes making a cup of coffee at work.. “minimalist” easy!
Kate
Thank you for sharing!
Joel
Some tips I’ve developed over years of making cold brew. 1st, don’t try to sweeten it with solid sugar or sweeteners. Make a simple syrup and use that instead. Just dissolve 1 cup of sugar in 1 cup of water and heat on your stove until they’re completely dissolved. Then store in the fridge. I’ve never tried this with alternative sweeteners like sweet an low or stevia, but I imagine it would work the same. Second, when filtering it I use a multiple stage filter to speed up the process. I use a French press filter and run it through a few times to get as much particulate as possible, then I run it through a finer filter like a paper coffee filter to get the finer stuff. I’ve also let it settle and just poured the coffee off the top in a pinch, but this method works better with a very large batch
★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing your take, Joel!
Bradley W.
People are rude. “Your measurements are wrong.” Just try it and see how it tastes. You’ll enjoy it. Great recipe…God is good. And for those that don’t think so, remember He created coffee.
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, Bradley!
Jen L.
I love your recipes!! Huge thanks for giving approximate quantities for us Americans who measure by volume, not weight. In this case I found that 3/4 c. whole coffee beans made 7/8 c. medium-course grinds, not 1.5 cups of grinds. I decided to use the amount I got with 3 c. cold water–we’ll see how it turns out!
Kate
You’re welcome! Thank you for sharing, Jen.
Lexi Smith
honestly this was really good. i think the ratio of coffee to water has too much coffee causing it to be bitter so i reused the grounds for another batch!
★★★
Kate
Thanks for your feedback, Lexi.
Marie S
Why did you say a cheesecloth is more wasteful than paper filters? That doesn’t seem right to me. Also, why do you recommend filtered water? Thanks, Marie
Joshua
I have just placed my coffee into the fridge. Can’t wait for 16 hours to be over!
★★★★★
Kate
What did you think?!
Joshua
Hey Kate! I’m really happy with your recipe! There’s a part where you did not covert your 85g of measurements when you click on different quantities.
My first brew could be drank undiluted because I used 6 cups of water for 85g of beans, when it actually should be 170g. Other than that, I’ve made my second brew! Thanks!
★★★★★
Lindsay
So I just used the recommended 85g coarse coffee plus 3 cups of water and it seemed to basically be wet coffee grounds. Did I do something wrong or is this to be expected? (I also made the mistake of using a container that just BARELY fit this volume of coffee and water. I’ll find something bigger or make a smaller batch next time).
LauraCatherine
Yes, thank you for the detailed instructions … Like they say, the devil is in the details. I will be trying this with decaf coffee. I know, what?! Ha! I discovered that caffeine trigers reflux for me. For anyone else who luvs coffee, but coffee dosen’t love them back. It is worth a try.
Kate
Thank you for sharing, Laura!
Susan
Hey thanks for this! I’ve been wondering how to make my own. Will give it a try.
Kate
You’re welcome, Susan!
Amy
As far as the measurements of the amount of coffee go, I found an easy way was to take about 1/4 of my 12 oz bag of coffee. Since I don’t have a kitchen scale, and the grounds of every bean could be different, this was an easy “guesstimate” for me and seemed to work just fine!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for your review, Amy!
Yvonne
This recipe helped me in the search for iced lattes! A little of this, some milk, chocolate syrup, and there it was!! Thank you!!
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Yvonne!
Bridget
I have a bunch of pre-ground coffee I’m not a huge fan of and figured I’d make cold brew with it. It’s finely ground though – it’s that doable do you think?
Deanna
It may be harder to strain out the grounds later, but should be doable. Also your brew will likely come out much stronger, you may want to cut down the steeping time or cut it with more water. I work at starbs and I’ve made coffee with fine grounds at home with success just following the above tips! Hope that helps.
★★★★★
Adam
My girlfriend worked for Starbucks, and we loved our results following your recipe! Thanks, Kate; your cold brew recipe is on point! We used our favorite Whole Foods coffee bean.
★★★★★
Kate
You’re welcome, Adam! Thanks for sharing.
Deanna
One important thing to note is be careful how you pour the coffee grounds into the filter!! The grounds will float to the surface and form a big clump around the mouth of the jar (at least this happened to me both times I followed this recipe). The first time I went to pour the coffee through the filter, the clump came out as one giant ball and splashed everywhere and I had black cold brew concentrate all over me and my kitchen luckily, it was laundry day so I threw everything in and nothing was stained. So the second time I made the cold brew, I first scooped out that giant clump into the filter first and then poured the rest of the concentration over it—-and I did this inside the kitchen sink instead of on the counter just in case!! I also infused my second batch with cinnamon (3tbsp ground cinnamon added to then grounds!) which I would highly recommend
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks for sharing, Deanna.
Susie
It’s funny, I was a lifelong tea drinker turned iced (just cold, no ice) breve lover…mmm breves :) I never liked coffee because it’s just too bitter…until I tried cold brew! And fyi: cold brew concentrate can Easily be swapped for espresso in a pinch in specialty coffee drinks. I had tried strong brewed Italian and French roasts in a pinch only to end up with a disgusting bitter breve.
★★★★★
Samantha
Curious how much caffeine is in a half cup of the concentrate?
marie
Hi! I was wondering if I could make this in my French press instead? I don’t have any other big container like that except for my French press and I don’t really have a means to purchase one (unless I find one thrifted). Does the coffee need to steep with a tight lid? I wouldn’t press down until the time suggested I just need a place for it to steep.
Sway
Beans take up more mass than grounds do so I think your numbers must be backwards.
Kate
Hi Sway, I know it seems different, but it’s correct. Trust me :)
Courtney
So. One question. Do you store it as a concentrate or with the added water?
Kate
Store it as a concentrate. Then see step 4 when you are ready to serve. I hope this helps!
Maria Jesson
Thank You So Much for this awesome sharing! Exited to try this Tonight
★★★★★
geekgirl
I use a filter by Klein industries that fits in a 64oz wide-mouth mason jar. It works very well. I do have a little sediment in the bottom of the jar, but decanting into another container after brewing takes care of that. They sell it on amazon along with the jars, and a screw on pour lids. Makes it super easy. I just rinse out well, and pop it in the dishwasher every 3 uses or so to keep it clean.
GF
Isn’t the whole bean to ground coffee ratio reversed? While beans take more space than ground. I thought it was weird and ran with it, only to find I needed heavier dilution. Now that I research more I see the numbers should be 1/2c whole yields about 1/4c ground. I’m brewing one now and will know in several hours.
Rhett
In line with GF’s comment: I just think the parenthetical is confusing. If you’re using cups for your coffee beans/grounds, just worry about measuring out the grounds final amount; so 1 1/2 cups. Otherwise just measure out the 85 grams (regardless of grounds or whole)
“3 ounces (85 grams) coarsely-ground coffee (that’s about ¾ cup whole coffee beans turned into about 1 ½ cups* coarsely-ground coffee)”
Once you grind 3/4 cups of beans you will most definitely not have more than you started with especially since whole beans are more porous and take up more volume than the grounds do. So again just worry about the last measurement; 1 1/2 cups of grounds if you don’t have a scale. Or to be less ambiguous and confusing if you do have a scale; 85 grams will always be 85 grams regardless if it’s grounds or whole beans.
★★★★★
Rick
I presently moved into Oklahoma City area, and I’m wondering if you have any favorite coffee brands that you might recommend. I will really appreciate your prompt response.
Thanks
★★★★★
Rocky
This coffee is the best ever. So smooth. I use a 2 quart Mason jar..
★★★★★
Sheena
This was smooth AF loved it! Best cold brew recipe ive tried
★★★★★
Kate
I’m happy you loved it, Sheena!
Maria
What can you use to flavor the cold brew pumpkin cream ?
Kate
I’m not sure without coming up with a recipe, sorry!
James
Great recipe and it’s saving me a bundle of money!
Tim
Great thanks. We have an Aeropress and have been experimenting with pour-over and also making cold coffee with leftover grounds. Summer is now here, where we are, and we want to make Cold Brew Coffee our main thing. This explains thethings very, very well.
Marie-Eve MacPherson
I make this now all the time but I add a pinch of salt to the brew- my dad always did this to help tone down the bitterness you can get sometimes! Thank you for all of your great recipes; my kiddos and I love your muffin recipes!!!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you for sharing!
Ruby
I will guiltily admit that I use regular old Maxwell House French Roast ground coffee to make my cold brew! I’m not a coffee connoisseur so the taste is okay with me. Plus I mix with a lot of milk or cream, unsweetened cocoa, cinnamon or pumpkin spices, and a bit of liquid stevia.
To strain, one of those reusable coffee filters for standard coffee makers works great. What I do is add 1 – 1.5 cups of the ground coffee with twice as much cold water, into a tall 4 cup plastic ziploc container – the kind that comes with the blue screw tops. Then I stir it around really well. I let it sit for a few minutes cuz some coffee always floats back up. Then I screw the top on and shake it all around to mix it super well!
When it’s done, I get an identical plastic container, place the filter on top (the smaller reusable coffee filters fit perfect), and slowly pour the mixture into the filter. The filter is SUPER fine mesh, and not a single ground makes it through. I pour the mixture out in a few batches and let the coffee drip into the new plastic container. Then when it’s all done, I add it to a glass jar or small pitcher for ready to drink cold brew!
Coco shredder
Maybe it’s just me, but I found your instructions to be very confusing.
I’ve reread it several times, and I’m still confused as to the terminologies used, the ratio and amounts. If this is wrong, please let me know. I’ve mixed double the water to the volume of grounds, and put in the fridge. In the a.m. (18 hours later) I will sieve it through a fine hankerchief, and then use the concentrate in an equal amount of water to make a cup of coffee?
★★